Dear colleagues,
The WHO is conducting a global research prioritization exercise to identify the top intervention research questions for child health (0-9 years).
While some exercise have been conducted for specific illnesses (e.g. pneumonia) or sub-populations (e.g. newborns), there is no consensus on a research agenda to improve child survival and health-particularly one that reflects the priorities of national health authorities and communities. The goal of this effort is to guide future research funding and collaboration efforts to the benefit of all children.
We are asking for your help to:
* Complete the survey (links below) and share up to three priority research questions related to interventions that would improve survival, health or development outcomes for newborns, infants, and children over the next decade.
* Forward this email to relevant individuals, groups, or networks in the field of child health, and,
* Work with national colleagues and communities to gain their inputs.
You can access the survey through the WHO web page here<https://www.who.int/news-room/articles-detail/call-for-research-question....
Or go directly to survey through the links below:
* English https://extranet.who.int/dataformv3/index.php/522617?lang=en
* French https://extranet.who.int/dataformv3/index.php/522617?lang=fr
* Spanish https://extranet.who.int/dataformv3/index.php/522617?lang=es
Survey deadline: 24 November 2024
We greatly appreciate your participation and support. For any questions, please contact the WHO team: childresearchpriorities@who.int.<mailto:childresearchpriorities@who.int>
Thank you for your understanding in case of any duplicate emails.
Kind regards,
Nigel
Nigel Rollins MD FRCPCh
CHIFA profile
Nigel Rollins joined the Department of Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health at WHO in July 2008. His work focuses primarily implementation research and prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV through infant feeding. He is also involved with broader paediatric issues including health systems research and severe malnutrition. He works at the WHO Head Quarters in Geneva.rollinsn@who.int